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Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring

In this paper, we present a wound-dressing-based antenna fabricated via screen-printed and inkjet-printed technologies. To inkjet print a conductive film on wound dressing, it must be screen-printed, UV-curable-pasted, and hard-baked to provide appropriate surface wettability. Two passes were UV-cur...

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Autores principales: Chen, Chun-Bing, Kao, Hsuan-Ling, Chang, Li-Chun, Lin, Yi-Chen, Chen, Yung-Yu, Chung, Wen-Hung, Chiu, Hsien-Chin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9503850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36144133
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi13091510
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author Chen, Chun-Bing
Kao, Hsuan-Ling
Chang, Li-Chun
Lin, Yi-Chen
Chen, Yung-Yu
Chung, Wen-Hung
Chiu, Hsien-Chin
author_facet Chen, Chun-Bing
Kao, Hsuan-Ling
Chang, Li-Chun
Lin, Yi-Chen
Chen, Yung-Yu
Chung, Wen-Hung
Chiu, Hsien-Chin
author_sort Chen, Chun-Bing
collection PubMed
description In this paper, we present a wound-dressing-based antenna fabricated via screen-printed and inkjet-printed technologies. To inkjet print a conductive film on wound dressing, it must be screen-printed, UV-curable-pasted, and hard-baked to provide appropriate surface wettability. Two passes were UV-curable-pasted and hard-baked at 100 °C for 2 h on the wound dressing to obtain 65° WCA for silver printing. The silver film was printed onto the wound dressing at room-tempature with 23 μm droplet spacing for three passes, then sintered at 120 °C for 1 h. By optimizing the inkjet printing conditions by modifying the surface morphologies and electrical properties, three-pass printed silver films with 3.15 μm thickness and 1.05 × 10(7) S/m conductivity were obtained. The insertion losses at the resonant frequency (17 and 8.85 GHz) were −2.9 and −2.1 dB for the 5000 and 10,000 μm microstrip transmission lines, respectively. The material properties of wound dressing with the relative permittivity and loss-tangent of 3.15–3.25 and 0.04–0.05, respectively, were determined by two transmission line methods and used for antenna design. A quasi-Yagi antenna was designed and implemented on the wound-dressing with an antenna bandwidth of 3.2–4.6 GHz, maximal gain of 0.67 dBi, and 42% radiation efficiency. The bending effects parallel and perpendicular to the dipole direction of three fixtures were also examined. The gain decreased from 0.67 to −1.22 dBi and −0.44 dBi for a flat to curvature radius of 5 cm fixture after parallel and perpendicular bending, respectively. Although the maximal gain was reduced with the bending radius, the directivity of the radiation pattern remained unchanged. The feasibility of a wound-dressing antenna demonstrates that inkjet-printed technology enables fast fabrication with low cost and environmental friendliness. Additionally, inkjet-printed technology can be combined with sensing technology to realize remote medical monitoring, such as with smart bandages, for assessment of chronic wound status or basic physical conditions.
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spelling pubmed-95038502022-09-24 Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring Chen, Chun-Bing Kao, Hsuan-Ling Chang, Li-Chun Lin, Yi-Chen Chen, Yung-Yu Chung, Wen-Hung Chiu, Hsien-Chin Micromachines (Basel) Article In this paper, we present a wound-dressing-based antenna fabricated via screen-printed and inkjet-printed technologies. To inkjet print a conductive film on wound dressing, it must be screen-printed, UV-curable-pasted, and hard-baked to provide appropriate surface wettability. Two passes were UV-curable-pasted and hard-baked at 100 °C for 2 h on the wound dressing to obtain 65° WCA for silver printing. The silver film was printed onto the wound dressing at room-tempature with 23 μm droplet spacing for three passes, then sintered at 120 °C for 1 h. By optimizing the inkjet printing conditions by modifying the surface morphologies and electrical properties, three-pass printed silver films with 3.15 μm thickness and 1.05 × 10(7) S/m conductivity were obtained. The insertion losses at the resonant frequency (17 and 8.85 GHz) were −2.9 and −2.1 dB for the 5000 and 10,000 μm microstrip transmission lines, respectively. The material properties of wound dressing with the relative permittivity and loss-tangent of 3.15–3.25 and 0.04–0.05, respectively, were determined by two transmission line methods and used for antenna design. A quasi-Yagi antenna was designed and implemented on the wound-dressing with an antenna bandwidth of 3.2–4.6 GHz, maximal gain of 0.67 dBi, and 42% radiation efficiency. The bending effects parallel and perpendicular to the dipole direction of three fixtures were also examined. The gain decreased from 0.67 to −1.22 dBi and −0.44 dBi for a flat to curvature radius of 5 cm fixture after parallel and perpendicular bending, respectively. Although the maximal gain was reduced with the bending radius, the directivity of the radiation pattern remained unchanged. The feasibility of a wound-dressing antenna demonstrates that inkjet-printed technology enables fast fabrication with low cost and environmental friendliness. Additionally, inkjet-printed technology can be combined with sensing technology to realize remote medical monitoring, such as with smart bandages, for assessment of chronic wound status or basic physical conditions. MDPI 2022-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9503850/ /pubmed/36144133 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi13091510 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chen, Chun-Bing
Kao, Hsuan-Ling
Chang, Li-Chun
Lin, Yi-Chen
Chen, Yung-Yu
Chung, Wen-Hung
Chiu, Hsien-Chin
Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring
title Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring
title_full Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring
title_fullStr Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring
title_full_unstemmed Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring
title_short Wound-Dressing-Based Antenna Inkjet-Printed Using Nanosilver Ink for Wireless Medical Monitoring
title_sort wound-dressing-based antenna inkjet-printed using nanosilver ink for wireless medical monitoring
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9503850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36144133
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi13091510
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